VIEW PDF - RICHARD JORDAN
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VIEW PDF - RICHARD JORDAN
HEROES &VILLAINS Marvel’s favourite antihero goes the way of the samurai in an epic eastern tale of love, honour and revenge. Total Film visits the set of The Wolverine to uncover the most sharp-edged superhero movie yet. WORDS RICHARD JORDAN ugh Jackman is riddled with bullet wounds. His crisp black shirt is caked in tar-like blood, glistening as it dries in the intense pacific sunshine. “We’re shooting an instance here where Wolverine gets really pissed off,” chuckles the Aussie A-lister, referring to his superhuman alter-ego – a centuries-old mutant with sharp claws, a sharper temper and, as evidenced by his gore-stained attire, serious regenerative powers. “A lot of his physicality is driven by rage and TFM205.feat_wolverine.indd 90 emotion, so sometimes the hard thing is maintaining that level [of intensity]. But it’s a great release for me. At the end of the day I feel like I’ve been through hours of therapy!” Total Film has travelled down under to meet Jackman on the Sydney set of The Wolverine – the sixth time (including his short but sweet First Class cameo) the actor has played the erstwhile X-Man on screen. Don’t call it a sequel, though… “I’m really thrilled the studio called it The Wolverine instead of Wolverine 2, because we’re trying to set it up as a standalone picture,” he explains. “Tonally, it’s different from the other X-Men movies. It’s got massive action sequences, as people would expect, and it’ll be great fun. But it is a character-driven movie. It’s about a guy completely out of his element, in this world that’s foreign to him, and how he copes with that.” Based on Chris Claremont’s fan-favourite comic arc and set after the events of the original X-Men trilogy (wisely relegating 2009’s lacklustre prequel X-Men Origins: Wolverine to a distant memory), The Wolverine sees our adamantiumclawed avenger going solo, journeying to the Land of the Rising Sun to investigate the death of a mysterious figure from his past. There, he falls in love with local girl Mariko (Tao Okamoto) and falls foul of her father – formidable crime lord >> 2/28/13 3:17 PM THE WOLVERINE TFM205.feat_wolverine.indd 91 2/28/13 3:18 PM HEROES &VILLAINS ‘IT’S THE BADASS WOLVERINE I KNOW EVERYBODY WANTS TO SEE’ Shingen (Hiroyuki Sanada) – as he gets caught up in the dangerous underworld of the Yakuza… “The graphic novel is so adventurous,” enthuses director James Mangold (Cop Land, 3:10 To Yuma), a newbie to the X-universe who’s relishing the opportunity to steer the franchise in a completely new direction. “It plunges into these ideas of destiny, honour and revenge – as opposed to your standard superhero sagas, which are generally about some gigantic villain out to destroy the Earth, a city or a football stadium. Japan’s such an exotic location, in the sense that language and culture play such a huge role in the movie. Usually you don’t find that at all in these kinds of films. To be staking out our own ground and be saying something unique was really liberating for me.” With the Japan-based location shoot already in the can, The Wolverine’s international cast and crew have returned to Australia for the remainder of the film’s production. Not that these antipodean surroundings will be any less authentic… For today’s scene, the Chinese Garden of Friendship on Sydney’s Darling Harbour has been transformed into a distinctly Japanese idyll, the painstaking production design ranging from intricate, ornamental samurai armour to a magnificent floating pagoda built in the middle of the garden’s glimmering lake. This is the setting for one of The Wolverine’s thrilling early set-pieces: a traditional Japanese funeral, attended by hundreds of black-suited extras and Jackman’s snarling mutant, is suddenly, violently interrupted by hordes of heavily-tattooed, katana-wielding Yakuza warriors. The sound of wind chimes tinkling gently in the breeze is broken by brutal battle cries and bloodcurdling screams, as our hero rushes, claws out, to defend Mariko from her would-be attackers. And, just as Jackman promised, he looks really pissed off… “I’ve seen playbacks of Hugh fighting different characters in the movie and he’s no joke! He’s probably in the best shape I’ve ever seen him in all the X-Mens,” raves Jackman’s co-star Will Yun Lee, himself no stranger to big-screen action having traded blows with James Bond in Die Another Day and Colin Farrell in Total Recall. Lee is playing Kenuichio Harada, Mariko’s half-brother who, in the comic universe at least, is revealed as one of Wolverine’s most iconic nemeses – the energy-manipulating Silver Samurai (“I can’t really reveal who my character is…” he teases, laughing nervously for fear of letting something slip). “The fighting style in this movie is very Japanese-specific,” Lee continues. “[The movie’s stunt team] 8711 is probably one of the best in the business. In training they beat me up all day and I could barely even walk home! Because we’re dealing with weapons like swords and Wolverine’s claws, even though they’re fake, you’re still just a fraction away from getting hurt or getting hit in the eye… I was like, ‘Oh my god, I better not miss my timing!’” If the mayhem that Total Film is currently watching unfold (from the safety of the playback monitor) is anything to go by, he’s not kidding… Wolverine has gone full berserker: sending guys even bigger than him crashing through shoji walls and, at one point, disarming a knife- GETTY, REX HUGH JACKMAN 92 | Total Film | May 2013 TFM205.feat_wolverine.indd 92 2/28/13 3:18 PM THE WOLVERINE Hard rain: (clockwise, from above) Jackman gets soaked on a night shoot; on location in Tokyo; Jackman as Logan/ Wolverine; filming in Sydney’s Chinese Garden of Friendship. wielding clan member by stabbing him through the bicep. Jackman may only be clutching rubber stumps (the full adamantium blades will, in this case, be added later using CG), but even the thought of it makes us wince. quick break in filming and Jackman, drenched in sweat and only mildly out of breath, bounds over to give us a sneak peek at the real deal: a pair of full metal claws, redesigned and streamlined to look – and feel – even more deadly. “They’re moulded to my hands,” the actor explains, “so they fit perfectly – I squeeze my fists and they look like they’re coming straight out.” They may be a movie prop but, as the scars on his hands attest (“I keep scraping my knuckles!” he admits), you wouldn’t want to be on the wrong end of them… “I would never fight hand-to-hand with these,” says Jackman, recalling an incident on the first X-Men movie where he accidentally stabbed Rebecca Romijn’s stunt double through the arm during a fight sequence. “So that’s why we have the stumps.” With such frenetic slicing and dicing on display, The Wolverine could well prove to be one of the most hard-edged Marvel movies to date. Is Mangold worried about any potential ratings battles? “I don’t tend to think of that per se,” the director muses. “ But I do want the movie to have an intensity. I don’t want it to feel just like a CG fest. I think so much of what’s badass about totalfilm.com TFM205.feat_wolverine.indd 93 Wolverine is his physicality: the sweat, blood, passion and anger. What we’re trying to do in terms of the action is restore, or even for the first time kind of explore his physicality on a more visceral level. It’s more modelled on films like The French Connection or The Outlaw Josey Wales or the Bourne films – not a guy who might bring down a 747 with a claw, but someone who seems more real, more immediate, more believable.” Such fighting talk will no doubt please those who were disappointed when the project’s original director Darren Aronofsky walked; any fears that his departure would take with it the chance of seeing a flinty, provocative Wolverine movie seem to have been misplaced. And, just like his roaming lead character, Mangold immersed himself in Japanese culture while prepping for the film, watching a host of classic samurai films (“I’d be listing all of them!” he laughs when Total Film quizzes him for a specific influence) and getting to grips with all aspects of eastern mythology… “In terms of Japanese lore, the idea of the ronin – the samurai without a purpose, without a master – seemed to me to be the perfect metaphor for who exactly Wolverine is when you come upon him in this movie,” Mangold says. “Kind of a hero without a reason for being a hero, who’s lost his desire to protect, or even know what he’s supposed to be protecting.” So, a new kind of hero in a new kind of superhero movie… Seems like The Wolverine will be going a long way to make up for the disappointment of Origins. “This is a story that I know the fans love,” says Jackman. “It’s the perfect vehicle to not only give a whole different perspective to the world, but also to understand the character. We’re all laying it on the line. I feel like we have the opportunity to deliver that badass, kick-ass Wolverine I know everybody wants to see.” TF The Wolverine opens on 25 July and will be reviewed in a future issue. NEW BLOOD The friends and foes making their big-screen debut… Shingen Yashida HIROYUKI SANADA The Wolverine’s big bad, Shingen is the leader of a powerful Yakuza clan and a highly skilled swordsman. “There’s a big fight scene between them,” reveals Sanada (Ringu, The Last Samurai). “It’s the famous claws versus samurai swords.” Mariko Yashida TAO OKAMOTO Japanese model Okamoto makes her feature debut as Mariko, the daughter of Shingen who’s torn between her love for Wolverine and her duty to her father. She’s no pushover, either: “She does some karate and knife-throwing…” promises Okamoto. Silver Samurai WILL YUN LEE Lee plays Kenuichio Harada, the illegitimate son of Shingen and a Japanese mutant who’s able to charge his katana with ‘tachyon energy’, turning it into a sort-of lightsaber that can cut through almost anything. “He’s an important character in the comics,” says Lee. “I hope I do him justice.” Viper SVETLANA KHODCHENKOVA This icy, eastern European boasts the nifty Subscribeevildoer at www.totalfilm.com/subs power of teleportation. “Viper doesn’t really have many people that she truly cares about,” explains Russian actress Khodchenkova. “Most of them, she just uses for her own purpose.” Yukio RILA FUKUSHIMA A trained killer with ninja skills and a rebellious spirit, Yukio is tasked with assassinating Wolverine but instead becomes his ally, helping him in his quest to bring down Shingen. “My character’s very physical,” Fukushima confirms. “Yukio and Wolverine have a lot in common. She really takes care of him and he also cares about her.” May 2013 | Total Film | 93 2/28/13 3:18 PM